"This here is..." colloquial, but is it regional?
"This here is..." colloquial, but is it regional?
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Wrong.
“Everyone thinks of changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself.”
― Leo Tolstoy
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And "Look it," is that New York, Chicago, New Jersey or Northern generally?
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My hypothesis - "This here" is country Americana, found only in this hemisphere, but in any rural area. I know a Minnesotan who says it all the time.
"You've gone from being crazy like a fox to crazy like Fox News."- Amy Wong
"Knoxville is a guitar town with a banjo problem."- Susan Bauer Lee
"Republicans in East Tennessee live in a government compound of national and state forests, land grant universities, nuclear research labs, and TVA lakes and dams, while pretending to be coonskin cappers guarding the mountain passes to stop socialism." - (Commenter from Oregon discussing the Tennessee Governors contest in the NYT)
"This here."
I suspected it was also an English colloquialism, so I googled "this here" and Dickens. This popped up in Great Expectations, Chapter XXIX:
"Burn me, if I know!" he retorted, first stretching himself and then shaking himself; "my orders ends here, young master. I give this here bell a rap with this here hammer, and you go on along the passage till you meet somebody."
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